Early Bronze The site dates back to at least the Early Bronze Age. Most of the EBA remains on the upper city were destroyed in the construction of the Hittite palace. Some remain in the lower town.
Late Bronze The enigmatic marauding
Kaskas burned this site during
Tudhaliya II's reign. The Hittites rebuilt it under the next king
Suppiluliuma I. 117
cuneiform tablets, mostly correspondence, were found at the site, mostly during excavations between 1973 and 1981. The letters found at Masat Höyük were edited by
Sedat Alp in a two-volume edition in
Turkish and
German in 1991. Most tablets here are correspondence between the site and the Hittite king, a "Tudhaliya" who was probably
Tudhaliya II. Most concern the Kaska front. The exact span of time covered by this correspondence has been debated. Due to the small number of local officials named in the letters, and the fact that multiple letters appear to deal with the same events, most scholars have assumed the letters span no more than a couple of decades. It is possible that the letters all date from the span of just one or two years, and that they were only preserved because they were buried under the destruction layer when the city was burned by the Kaskas. The Hittites' capital at this time was either
Sapinuwa (which has been found) or else
Samuha (which has been identified since 2005 based on archives). One place-name mentioned in the texts is
Tabigga/
Tabikka/
Tapikka, which is now generally considered to be the Hittite name of the Maşat Höyük site. The site also contains 14th-century BC
Helladic period ware from mainland Greece. ==Archaeology==